Tassman
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2012
- Messages
- 1,248
Absolutely not true.
MISCONCEPTION: Natural selection acts for the good of the species.
This link doesn’t contradict the argument. Evolution favours traits that enable individuals to survive and reproduce. It endows social species’ with qualities which include bonding, cooperation, reciprocity and awareness of the social rules of the group. These innate qualities form the basis of our morality.
Competition (and therefore natural selection) within a species tends to be much higher than between species, since they will be directly competing for all resources as well as mates.
To a degree! But generally it is between different tribes (or packs) within the same species. Otherwise the advantages of being members of a group would not obtain. For example, lack of group cohesion could make individuals more vulnerable to attack from rival tribes. Being part of group improves the chances of finding food, e.g. among animals that hunt in packs to take down large or dangerous prey.
This is true, but realize that those "morals", will not be a single set of morals, but a whole collection of different morals, many of which will be diametrically opposed to each other.
These will not be “opposed to each other” to the extent that group cohesion is threatened; this would be contrary to our instinctive nature as social animals.
That is the survival of the individual and its descendants, not the survival species though.
It’s both, but the survival of the species is a by-product.
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